"Staying Power" is the first track on Queen's 1982 album Hot Space. It was written by lead singer Freddie Mercury and is notable as being the only Queen song to have a horn section, which was arranged by Arif Mardin. The song is driven by a funk-styled bass riff (played by Mercury) beginning in D minor and modulating to E minor throughout the song. John Deacon does not play bass guitar on this song--instead playing rhythm guitar on a Fender Telecaster. Roger Taylor programmed a Linn LM-1 drum machine for the track. Brian May is on his Red Special. In a Stylus review of the album, critic Anthony Miccio described the song's style as "an electro-disco track with frenetic horns."
The song was released as a single in Japan, the US and Poland where it reached #21.
Video Staying Power
Live performances
This song was played throughout the Hot Space Tour and to an extent, on The Works Tour. The live version of "Staying Power" is slightly different from the album version. Morgan Fisher took over the keyboard parts and replaced the Oberheim with a Roland Jupiter 8. Taylor replaced the drum machine with acoustic and electric drums. Also of note is that it was the only song played live in which Deacon played rhythm guitar, as the bass was performed via keyboard. With the electronics scaled back on the live version, the song is transformed into a funk rock song--rather than a disco-influenced rock song that stays strong to its disco influences. The live is on Queen On Fire: Live At The Bowl album and DVD, Queen Greatest Video Hits 2 and on the Hot Space 2011 deluxe CD album.
Maps Staying Power
Personnel
- Freddie Mercury - lead and backing vocals, synthesiser, synth bass
- Brian May - lead guitar
- Roger Taylor - electronic drums, drum machine
- John Deacon - rhythm guitar
Additional credits
- Arif Mardin: "Hot and spacey" horn arrangement
References
External links
- Live at The Bowl (official video) on YouTube
- Lyrics at Queen official website
Source of article : Wikipedia